If killing, rape, stealing, lying, and torture are all wrong nation-wide in everyone's conscience, then this suggests that there is some form of moral order which the Universe conforms itself to. I believe that there is a God who created this objective moral standard, and thus the fact that the standard exists is evidence of a God.

If killing, rape, stealing, lying, and torture are all wrong nation-wide in everyone's conscience, then this suggests that there is some form of moral order which the Universe conforms itself to.

Argumentum ad populum.

I believe that there is a God who created this objective moral standard, and thus the fact that the standard exists is evidence of a God.

Circular logic. You believe that God created the objective moral standard, and that the standard lends itself to God's existence. You would have no reason to suppose either claim without the support of the other, so neither of these claims can stand on their own.

Every single one of those is up for debate among different people. What is properly a human "right", or even if there are any true human rights, will probably be disagreed upon by every human and especially between different societies and countries.

I believe to be truly free is to realize there is an objective moral standard that you cannot achieve perfectly, recognise the need for a Saviour, and thus accept Jesus Christ as your Lord and King.

Doing so liberates us from the bondage of sin, and removes the bonds of slavery that once tied us down.

This is fine if this is what you believe, but they can't be considered points of debate, since they contain blatant religious bias that I can't respond to.

Because of a lack of characters, I will simply state the following:

There is no way to go from "is" to "ought". What is can never be indicative of absolute "oughtness" or moral obligation in its truest sense. What people think cannot be a means by which to bridge the gap, since people are wrong all the time. What nature seems to indicate means nothing, since it seems that nature must often be tempered.